Bottle shared with L.
Aroma has chocolat, alcohol and loads of peat, smoke, dirt.
Chocolat brown colour, tan head, hazy, some sediments.
Tasted had sweet caramel and some roasted but got overruled when the peat kicks in.
Full taste, nice experiment that has a lot of different tastes in one beer, but for me they are too much exceeded by the peat.

Pours black with a small cloud with a very recognizable Ardbeg smell with a lot of peat but also smelling like a dark beer. Very rich aroma of salty peat, like Ardbeg’s whisky. Very interesting texture with a tingly carbonation and something recognizable from Ardbeg. Nice bittersweet taste.
Only disadvantage is that it’s hard to say if this is still a true beer, as the Ardbeg is so recognizable in this.

Almost black in color, small light brown head.
Smells like Ardbeg, really peated smell that overpowered the smell of the dark beer.
The taste is a hard one to describe, much much going on, the taste of the peaty smoky Ardbeg is very recognizable, the beer adds a camaral sweet taste, also a bit of a port taste as it’s a aged beer.
This beer is something special, someone who doesn’t like Islay whisky will not like this beer as much.

Bottle from The Davis Beer Shoppe. Pours ruddy amber brown with a slight beige head. Aroma is rather single malt. Peaty/smoky. Med body. Flavor is sweet smooth burnt malt with lots of peat. This is a slow drinker, but compares very favorably with the excessive BrewDog Paradox.

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